Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Spanish king ‘concerned’ about political deadlock: lawmaker

-

King Felipe VI is "concerned" about Spain's political paralysis, a lawmaker who met him said Tuesday as the monarch began a fourth round of talks with party representatives to try and agree on a government.

The country has been without a fully-functioning government for seven months after December elections failed to give any party an absolute parliamentary majority.

Efforts to forge a coalition were unsuccessful, prompting repeat elections in June with a similar result, and political parties have once again been forced to the negotiating table with no positive outcome in sight.

"I found the head of state more concerned than last time," said lawmaker Pedro Quevedo, who won a parliamentary seat for the small, regional Nueva Canarias party in the June polls.

Mariano Rajoy has headed a caretaker government in Spain with limited powers since the December poll...
Mariano Rajoy has headed a caretaker government in Spain with limited powers since the December polls which resulted in a hung parliament
Pierre-Philippe Marcou, AFP/File

He was the first to meet with the king, who is due to hold talks with party leaders until Thursday and will appoint one of them as the prime ministerial candidate tasked with forming a government.

The leader selected by the king will need to get enough support from other parties to push a coalition government through a parliamentary vote of confidence.

Acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, head of the conservative Popular Party (PP) that won the largest number of seats in June elections, is the obvious candidate.

But, in another echo of the December election outcome, leaders of other parties have refused to back Rajoy and he has hinted he may not put himself forward without the support he needs.

That would leave Pedro Sanchez, head of the Socialist Party that came second in June elections, the second-most obvious candidate of choice -- just like he was after the December polls.

At the time, Sanchez took on the task of forming a government, but failed to garner enough support as far-left upstart Podemos -- which came third -- refused to back him, prompting the repeat elections.

Sanchez would face a similar uphill struggle this time round.

As the stalemate continues and concern grows that Spain may need to hold a third election, lawmaker and PP spokesman Pablo Casado warned Tuesday that "Spain needs a stable government soon."

"A new government is the only thing that will avoid holding new elections," he said.

King Felipe VI is “concerned” about Spain’s political paralysis, a lawmaker who met him said Tuesday as the monarch began a fourth round of talks with party representatives to try and agree on a government.

The country has been without a fully-functioning government for seven months after December elections failed to give any party an absolute parliamentary majority.

Efforts to forge a coalition were unsuccessful, prompting repeat elections in June with a similar result, and political parties have once again been forced to the negotiating table with no positive outcome in sight.

“I found the head of state more concerned than last time,” said lawmaker Pedro Quevedo, who won a parliamentary seat for the small, regional Nueva Canarias party in the June polls.

Mariano Rajoy has headed a caretaker government in Spain with limited powers since the December poll...

Mariano Rajoy has headed a caretaker government in Spain with limited powers since the December polls which resulted in a hung parliament
Pierre-Philippe Marcou, AFP/File

He was the first to meet with the king, who is due to hold talks with party leaders until Thursday and will appoint one of them as the prime ministerial candidate tasked with forming a government.

The leader selected by the king will need to get enough support from other parties to push a coalition government through a parliamentary vote of confidence.

Acting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, head of the conservative Popular Party (PP) that won the largest number of seats in June elections, is the obvious candidate.

But, in another echo of the December election outcome, leaders of other parties have refused to back Rajoy and he has hinted he may not put himself forward without the support he needs.

That would leave Pedro Sanchez, head of the Socialist Party that came second in June elections, the second-most obvious candidate of choice — just like he was after the December polls.

At the time, Sanchez took on the task of forming a government, but failed to garner enough support as far-left upstart Podemos — which came third — refused to back him, prompting the repeat elections.

Sanchez would face a similar uphill struggle this time round.

As the stalemate continues and concern grows that Spain may need to hold a third election, lawmaker and PP spokesman Pablo Casado warned Tuesday that “Spain needs a stable government soon.”

“A new government is the only thing that will avoid holding new elections,” he said.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

Let’s just hope sanity finally gets a word in edgewise.

Tech & Science

The role of AI regulation should be to facilitate innovation.

Sports

In the shadow of the 330-metre (1,082-foot) monument, workers are building the temporary stadium that will host the beach volleyball.

World

Iranians lift up a flag and the mock up of a missile during a celebration following Iran's missiles and drones attack on Israel, on...